An easy-to-install, free collection of open source packages,
including Python and the conda package manager. Over 150 packages are
installed with Anaconda. After installing Anaconda, you can install
or update over 250 additional open source packages contained in
the Anaconda Repository using the
condainstallPACKAGEcommand.

The Anaconda Client command line interface (CLI) allows you to log into
Anaconda Repository directly from your Terminal window or Anaconda Prompt
and manage your account. It is not necessary for downloading or installing
packages from Repository.

Repository hosts hundreds of useful Python packages,
notebooks and environments for a wide variety of applications. You
do not need to be logged in, or even need a Repository account,
to search for packages, download and install them.

Part of the URLs for Repository where conda looks for packages.
Labels are searched only if you specify a label.

The default label is “main,” so packages that are uploaded without
specifying a label are automatically labeled “main.” The version
labeled main is also downloaded by default, unless a user specifies
a different label. So, if a file is labeled main, then the label
name may be omitted from the URL.

A minimal installer for conda. Like
Anaconda, Miniconda
is a software package that includes the conda package manager
and Python and its dependencies, but does not include any other
packages. Once conda is installed by installing either Anaconda
or Miniconda, you can install other software packages directly
from the command line using condainstall.

Each user and organization has their own location called a
“namespace” where they may host packages. You can view the public
packages in a user or organization’s namespace by navigating to their
user page.

EXAMPLE: The “travis” user namespace located at
https://<your-anaconda-repo>/travis contains packages that were
uploaded and shared by the user whose account is named “travis.”

A conda package that contains nothing specific to any system
architecture, so it may be installed on any system. When conda
searches for packages on any system in a channel, conda always
checks both the system-specific subdirectory—such as
linux-64—and the noarch directory.

An organization account is a type of account on Repository that
allows multiple individual users to administer packages and control
package access to different user groups. It also includes a large
amount of storage space.

Use organization accounts to:

Share packages, environments or notebooks under an organization’s
account rather than your personal account.

Assign multiple account administrators.

Assign different access permissions to groups of users and customize
per-package access by group.

An access control token is a random alphanumeric string that is
inserted into a URL that you give to another Repository user.
The token allows them to download a package or add a channel
that you have marked private. Only those users with the correct
access token can access the private file. You can use Client to
generate tokens to give other users specifically scoped access to
packages and collections.